With the war over, soldier-athletes came back to campuses
around the country to find coach Hank Iba's Oklahoma A&M team at the top of
the heap in college basketball and determined to stay there.

Big Bob Kurland, who had led A&M to an NCAA
championship in '45, was back for his senior year and the Aggies, once known for
their deliberate style of play, were now scoring points with a very unIba-like
abandon. Paced by Kurland, who led the country in scoring (58 points in his
final game against St. Louis), A&M went 120 in the Missouri Valley,
282 in the regular season and 30 in the NCAAs. They beat North Carolina in
the final, 4340, as Kurland, winning his second straight MVP award, outscored
the Tar Heels' Bones McKinney, 235.

Southeastern Conference champion Kentucky won the NIT when
freshman guard Ralph Beard sank a free throw in the final seconds of the
championship game to beat Rhode Island, 4645.

Like Kurland, George Mikan (a 5th year eligible) returned
in '46. Mikan was an All-America again, but the 195 Demons didn't play in
either tourney.

If Bob Kurland didn't eat, drink and breathe basketball at Oklahoma A&M,
he did sleep it. That was a direct result of his accommodations on campus. The
man never was far from the court on which he developed into a star.

His college career didn't begin that way. As was the case with the majority
of freshmen who registered in the fall of 1942, he moved into a dormitory. But
it was wartime and when the Army took possession of the building to house
trainees, Kurland bunked in a room at the field house.

And that's where he lived, along with two other students, during a
significant portion of his days in Stillwater. With the quarters came
responsibility for cleaning up after practice and locking the doors. By the time
he was a senior, Kurland could joke that he was the only three-time All-American
who swept the floor.

As it was, Kurland spent so much time in the field house working to improve
himself that it only made sense to spend his nights there. It saved him, he
decided, 30 to 40 minutes a day. He could go directly from practice to the
shower and from the shower to his room with no wasted motion.

The 7-foot center was determined to wring the most from his ability at a time
when others saw no ability at all. In the eyes of many, some of them basketball
people, he was a freak.

"They ridiculed him a lot when he first started to play," said
Henry Iba, his coach. "It took a strong man to stand up to that."

Kurland stood up to his full height despite the jibes of others. Even Phog
Allen, the esteemed coach at Kansas, referred to players Kurland's size as
"glandular goons."

Kurland held his tongue. But he would show them all, on the court.

He worked on developing his motor skills and then built up his leg strength
and stamina. There wasn't much he could do about his speed.

"He wasn't so good at running," Iba said, "but he had a good
mind for competing."

And he progressed each year until he led the Aggies to the national
championship as a junior. For those who thought they had seen the best of
Kurland, he offered his senior season as silent testimony.

His supporting cast had changed considerably from 1945. Cecil Hankins and
Doyle Parrack had departed. Among the newcomers was Sam Aubrey, who had been
wounded in Italy during the war and had returned to school on crutches the
previous spring. Aubrey, a forward, was an all-league selection in the Missouri
Valley Conference, which resumed a full schedule in 1946.

Oklahoma A&M went undefeated in conference play in '46. And Kurland,
playing in a deliberate offense, led the nation in total points. Against St.
Louis, he set an individual major-college scoring record with 58 points.

Despite its outstanding record, and the presence of Kurland, the defending
champion was not guaranteed a spot in the NCAA Tournament. Kansas, also included
in District 5, had won 19 of 20 games and considered itself deserving of a
place. The selection committee authorized a special playoff for the berth in the
NCAA Western competition.

The game was played in Kansas City and it was no contest -- thanks to a big
man who resented being called a "glandular goon" and was able to do
something about it.

In New York, the Eastern playoffs were more competitive. For the second time
in two years, Ohio State dissipated a sizable lead and was beaten in overtime in
the game that decided the championship representative.

A year earlier, New York University had ruined the Buckeyes' plans. This time
it was North Carolina, coached by Lt. Ben Carnevale, a former NYU player and a
Navy V-12 instructor stationed at Chapel Hill. The Tar Heels won, 60-57. To
reach the Eastern final, in fact, Carnevale's team had to get by NYU in the
first round.

Returning to the Garden in an attempt to win a second consecutive national
championship, Oklahoma A&M had become the most celebrated team in the
country. The Aggies' greatest attraction, of course, was Kurland.

According to Iba, Kurland had made the very first dunk in intercollegiate
competition. It occurred against Temple in Philadelphia during one of the Aggies'
East Coast swings.

"We never talked about dunking the ball," the coach said.
"This time, he just jumped up and did it. The official took the points away
from us."

Of greater concern to basketball legislators had been Kurland's ability to
deflect shots on their downward arc to the basket. He first attempted to
goaltend in his freshman year against Oklahoma, which had a fine team that later
would be selected for the NCAA Tournament.

"Bruce Drake (the Oklahoma coach) had a fit," Kurland said.

Noting Kurland's increased agility, Iba based his defense on the
shot-rejection tactic the next season.

"He'd just pin it up on the boards," Iba said. "Teams had to
worry all the time about him tipping it out of there."

Not surprising, Oklahoma A&M led the nation in defense in 1944, yielding
only 28.8 points per game. In frustration, Drake called on James St. Clair,
chairman of the National Basketball Committee, to witness the strategy.

"I think we knocked down only two shots that night," Kurland said.
"The damage was mostly psychological."

Nevertheless, in its meeting held in conjunction with the '44 championship
game, the committee voted to outlaw the practice of impeding shots on their
downward flight. That was all right with Kurland and Iba, who thought
goaltending was bad for basketball.

"You could always defeat it with screens or by stepping on the man's
feet," Kurland said. "But psychologically, it was wrong. It got you
out of good practice habits."

Even the new rule couldn't slow Kurland and his team. The Aggies won their
national championship without the benefit of goaltending and now they were back
in New York to claim another. For the first time, the Eastern and Western
runners-up were invited to the site to play a consolation game for third place.
The result was a tournament record crowd of 18,479.

Kurland rose to the occasion. In 6-6 Horace "Bones" McKinney, North
Carolina had a pivotman as quick with his tongue as he was with his feet.
McKinney attempted to distract Kurland with his barbs, but the big man had been
ridiculed before.

The Aggies' star kept his composure and responded with his finest performance
in 10 appearances at the Garden.

His hook shots in the early going kept the teams even and, when the Tar Heels
concentrated their defense on him, Kurland passed to Weldon Kern for three easy
baskets. The Aggies held a 23-17 lead at halftime and extended the margin to 13
points five minutes into the second half. Shortly thereafter, McKinney was
charged with his fifth foul and left the game. He had scored only five points.

To North Carolina's credit, it rallied on the hook shots of John Dillon, a
6-3 forward, closing the deficit to 36-33 midway through the second half. But
Kurland would not be denied. He scored his team's next seven points as the
Aggies opened a 43-34 lead, which the Tar Heels whittled to 43-40 at the final
buzzer.

Kurland accounted for nine of Oklahoma A&M's 16 field goals and was
awarded a second outstanding player award. And the Aggies became the first
school to claim a second championship, consecutively or otherwise.

Iba was particularly pleased for Aubrey, the returning serviceman. As he
watched the man walk to center court to receive his championship watch, the
coach beamed.

"That," he said, "is the kind of thing you remember."

The accomplishment of the Aggies guaranteed the team and its star never would
be forgotten.